Skip to main content

Concrete Driveway Patio Contractors in Dallas, TX

Hire concrete & driveway contractors contractors in Dallas with confidence. All 56 ProList Local pros are licensed, insured, and background-checked before listing.

Browse all services in Dallas, TX ->
Get Free Quotes →
56contractors

56 contractors in Dallas

All Concrete & Driveway Contractors Contractors56

Tolteca Contracting Group

1002 S Beckley Ave , Dallas, TX 75203-2810

BBB Accredited A+ rated. Roofing Contractors, Concrete Contractors, Painting Contractors ...

Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more

View Profile

Renco Construction

2418 S Beckley Ave , Dallas, TX 75224-2916

BBB Accredited A+ rated. Paving Contractors, Concrete Contractors, Concrete Leveling ...

Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more

View Profile

JJJ Garcia's LLC

Dallas, TX 75208-1236

BBB Accredited A+ rated. Foundation Repair, Concrete Contractors, Excavating Contractors ...

Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more

View Profile

Cowboy Concrete

Dallas, TX 75243-7126

BBB Accredited A+ rated. Concrete Contractors, Paving Contractors, Patios and Decks ...

Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more

View Profile

All American Custom Home Builders LLC

5050 Quorum Dr Ste 700 , Dallas, TX 75254-1410

BBB Accredited A+ rated. Custom Home Builder, Roofing Contractors, General Contractor ...

Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more

View Profile

All Star Foundation Repair

1805 Balmoral Dr , Carrollton, TX 75006-7313

BBB Accredited A+ rated. Foundation Repair, Concrete Contractors, Home Improvement ...

Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more

View Profile

B&R General Contracting LLC

926 Wateka Way , Richardson, TX 75080-4015

Roofing Contractors, General Contractor, Concrete Contractors ...

Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more

View Profile

JC Foundation Repair

143 Embrey Dr , Dallas, TX 75232-2608

BBB Accredited A+ rated. Foundation Repair, Roofing Contractors, Concrete Contractors ...

Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more

View Profile

Dalrock Foundation Repair

2060 N Collins Blvd STE 105 , Richardson, TX 75080-2657

BBB Accredited A+ rated. Foundation Contractors, Concrete Contractors, Foundation Repair ...

Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more

View Profile

Santos Landscaping

PO Box 153648 , Irving, TX 75015-3648

BBB Accredited A+ rated. Sprinkler Systems, Concrete Contractors, Landscape Contractors ...

Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more

View Profile

All in 1 Foundations

Mesquite, TX 75149-3126

BBB Accredited A+ rated. Foundation Repair, Concrete Contractors, Foundation Contractors

Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more

View Profile

Nationwide Renovation, LLC

2775 Villa Creek Dr STE 150 , Dallas, TX 75234-7463

BBB Accredited A+ rated. Painting Contractors, Roofing Contractors, Concrete Contractors ...

Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more

View Profile

DIY vs. Professional Concrete Work in Dallas, TX

DIY vs. Hiring a Concrete Contractor in Dallas, TX

Let's be direct: poured concrete flatwork (driveways, patios, sidewalks) is not practical DIY in Dallas. The combination of expansive soil, heat, commercial-only concrete delivery, and required city permits creates barriers that don't exist in simple home improvement projects. Here's the full picture.


Comparison Table

FactorDIYProfessional
Ready-mix delivery⚠️ Available, but 1 yard minimum, $150–$200/yard — difficult to manage aloneContractor pricing: $120–$160/yard with established supplier relationships
Concrete forming✅ Possible for small areasProfessional forming ensures grade, slope, and edge quality
Slab thickness compliance⚠️ Hard to verify without concrete depth pinsContractor accountable to permit inspection
Dallas soil prep (clay)❌ Requires engineered base or lime stabilization — specialized knowledgeContractor assesses and mitigates heave risk
Curing in Dallas heat❌ Hot concrete cures in 30–45 min without retarder — window to finish is too short for DIYersPros use retarding admixtures, wet curing blankets
Expansion joint placement⚠️ Incorrect spacing in DFW soil causes cracking within 3 yearsACI-compliant spacing matched to slab dimensions
City permitRequired for connected driveways — contractor pulls itDIY homeowners can pull owner-builder permits but face inspection risk
EquipmentConcrete vibrator ($150/day rental), float, bull float, trowel, screed board — $300–$600 in toolsContractor-owned and maintained
Total small patio DIY cost$1,500–$2,500 (materials + tool rentals + permit)$2,000–$5,500 professional installed
Risk of failureHigh — DFW climate punishes substandard work in 2–3 yearsProfessional work with warranty

The Math on DIY in Dallas

A 250 sq ft backyard patio at 4" depth = approximately 3 cubic yards of concrete ($450–$600 materials). Add: forming lumber ($80), rental equipment ($250–$350 for float, vibrator, screed), wire mesh or fibermesh ($80), and your time (8–12 hours for an inexperienced crew). Total: ~$1,000–$1,100 in materials/rentals, not counting weather risk, cracking from improper curing, or potential rework.

Professional installation of the same patio: $2,000–$3,500. The gap is real, but the risk-adjusted calculation frequently favors professional — particularly in Dallas where hot weather and soil movement dramatically compress DIY success rates.


Genuine DIY Opportunities (Small Scale)

Stepping stone pathways: Pre-cast concrete stepping stones or forms for 12"–18" poured stones — completely DIY-appropriate. Materials cost $30–$80, no permit required, minimal curing knowledge needed.

Concrete repair: Surface-level crack filling using a hydraulic cement or polyurethane crack filler (Quikrete Concrete Repair, $8–$18/tube) is DIY-appropriate for hairline or cosmetic cracks. Structural cracks (horizontal, with displacement, or in a heaving section) need professional diagnosis — grinding and filling a structural crack in Dallas clay without addressing the cause creates a $300 cosmetic fix for a $3,000 structural problem.

Paver patios: Concrete pavers (not poured concrete) are DIY-installable on a compacted sand base. Error margins are more forgiving — individual pavers can be reset, unlike a cracked slab that must be demolished. Materials: $4–$8/sq ft DIY vs. $12–$20/sq ft professional installed.


When Professional Is Non-Negotiable in Dallas

  • Driveway replacement: Permit required, concrete truck access required, expansion joints must conform to Dallas code
  • Any pour over 100 sq ft: Too much concrete to manage without professional timing and finishing crew
  • Expansive clay areas: Preston Hollow, Lakewood, East Dallas — any bare clay lot needs base treatment before a slab
  • Near established trees: Root barriers and expansion joint strategy require professional assessment

Professional concrete work in Dallas carries an implicit soil and climate warranty. DIY in DFW's conditions carries neither.

Concrete Driveway & Patio FAQ — Dallas, TX

Frequently Asked Questions: Concrete Work in Dallas, TX


How much does a concrete driveway cost in Dallas?

A standard 2-car driveway (approximately 450–600 sq ft) in Dallas costs $3,800 – $7,500 professionally installed, including demo of existing asphalt or concrete if applicable. The range reflects variables specific to Dallas: clay soil conditions requiring additional base preparation, reinforcement spec (fibermesh vs. rebar), finish type (broom vs. exposed aggregate vs. stamped), and access constraints. Stamped concrete driveways in premium neighborhoods like Preston Hollow or the Park Cities run $8,000–$15,000 for a 2-car footprint. Per BLS data for the Dallas-Plano-Irving MSA, concrete finishing labor in DFW is competitively priced compared to coastal metros — but material costs (concrete, rebar, wire mesh) have risen 20–35% since 2021.


Why does concrete crack so much in Dallas?

Three overlapping causes: expansive black clay soil, temperature extremes, and improper installation. Dallas's Blackland Prairie Vertisol clay swells 15–30% when wet (spring rains) and shrinks dramatically when dry (July–September drought), creating constant vertical movement under slabs. Combined with summer temperatures that accelerate curing beyond optimal rates, concrete that was installed without proper expansion joints, adequate reinforcement, and retarding admixtures will crack within 3–7 years. The American Concrete Institute recommends control joints every 8–10 feet for exterior flatwork in moisture-variable climates — many Dallas residential contractors space them incorrectly. If your existing driveway is cracking, check joint spacing first.


Do I need a permit for a concrete driveway in Dallas?

Yes — for most driveway work. The City of Dallas Development Services Department requires a permit for new driveways that connect to public right-of-way (almost all residential driveways), and for replacements over a certain threshold. Permits for standard residential concrete work run $75–$200. Contractors registered with Dallas Development Services pull permits as part of their standard process. A permit means a city inspection — which protects your investment and creates documentation of code-compliant work. Unpermitted driveways can create complications during home sale inspections. Verify permit status with Dallas Development Services.


How long does a concrete driveway last in Dallas?

A properly installed concrete driveway — 5" thick 4,000 PSI mix with fibermesh or #3 rebar, proper curing, and correctly spaced expansion joints — should last 25–40 years in Dallas. An improperly installed driveway (standard 4" unreinforced pour without retarder in July) typically shows significant cracking within 5–10 years and may require full replacement within 15 years. Dallas's soil movement accelerates failure in under-engineered slabs. The upgrade from a standard spec to an enhanced spec (additional 1" thickness + fibermesh) adds $400–$800 to a standard driveway — while potentially adding 10–15 years of service life.


What's the best time of year to pour concrete in Dallas?

October through April — when daily highs stay below 85°F. Dallas's concrete contractors are busiest in spring (March–May) when weather is ideal. Fall (October–November) offers similar temperatures with less competition for scheduling. Avoid June through September if possible — temperatures routinely exceeding 100°F require significant admixture (retarders, water reducers) and early-morning pours to achieve proper curing. If you must pour in summer, any reputable Dallas contractor will: pour at first light (6–7 AM), use a mid-range retarder, and apply a curing compound or wet burlap immediately after finishing. A contractor who offers to pour at noon on a 100° August day without discussing heat management should not get your business.


Is stamped concrete worth it in Dallas?

Stamped concrete costs $10–$25/sq ft versus $7–$10/sq ft for basic broom-finish — a premium of $1,500–$5,000 on a standard patio. In Dallas, the value proposition is strong for: pool surrounds (cooler surface feel and improved traction vs. plain concrete), covered patio extensions in Highland Park or Southlake where aesthetics drive resale value, and front entry approaches in neighborhoods with strict HOA standards. For plain driveways or utility areas, the premium rarely returns in home value. One caution specific to Dallas: stamped concrete with surface color penetrants can fade significantly in UV-intense DFW summers — ask your contractor about UV-resistant sealers applied at 2-year intervals ($300–$600/sealing cycle) to maintain appearance.


How do I find a reputable concrete contractor in Dallas?

  1. Verify city registration at Dallas Development Services — confirms they're authorized to pull permits in Dallas
  2. Ask for 3–5 DFW references (not from other states or climates — Dallas soil conditions are unique)
  3. Request written concrete spec: Minimum 3,500 PSI mix, 5" minimum thickness for driveways, expansion joints per ACI guidelines, and specified reinforcement
  4. Confirm permit will be pulled before work begins
  5. Check BBB Dallas (bbb.org/dallas) for complaint history
  6. Get 3+ written bids — pricing variance of 25–40% is common among Dallas concrete contractors